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Deleted member 3812

User requested account closure
Banned
Oct 25, 2017
8,821
The Hollywood Reporter is reporting that China has suddenly ordered a full shutdown of their movie theaters again, no official word was given on what caused this sudden reversal, insiders believe that the Chinese government is worried that there's the potential of China getting a second wave of coronavirus infections:

www.hollywoodreporter.com

China Shuts Down All Cinemas, Again

Beijing's film regulators have slammed the brakes on China's plan to gradually reopen cinemas, ordering all movie theaters shut again.

03/27/2020

China's film regulators has slammed the brakes on plans to gradually reopen the country's cinemas.

Over 600 movie theaters across China were given the green light to reopen their doors over the past week, but Beijing's Film Bureau put out a notice late Friday ordering all theaters to go back into shutdown.

No official explanation for the sudden reversal was provided. Industry insiders instantly began speculating that the government was worried about a potential second wave of coronavirus infections.

The decision comes as a shock given the signals authorities had been sending as recently as a day ago. On Thursday, Shanghai's municipal government announced that 205 of the city's movie theaters had received permission to resume business on Saturday. Earlier in the week, China Film Group, the dominant state-backed distributor, unveiled a plan to let cinemas rerelease past blockbusters to help lure customers back into seats. The scheme was to entail both local hits, such as Wolf Warrior 2 and The Wandering Earth, and Hollywood-made product, such as the full Avengers franchise and last year's Oscar best picture winner, Green Book.

The phased reopening of China's vast network of 70,000 movie screens had promised a rare bright spot on the global distribution map, given that cinemas are shuttered in virtually every other major market around the globe, including North America, Europe, Japan and elsewhere. Beijing's decision to reclose — or stay closed — was met with dismay by stakeholders throughout the Chinese industry.

"This second closure will not be a one- or two-week issue," an executive at a major exhibition company told The Hollywood Reporter, asking not to be named because of the sensitivity of commenting on government policy related to the coronavirus. "They are going to be even more cautious when they attempt to reopen again — and this will set us back a long time."
 

Loxley

Prophet of Truth
Member
Oct 25, 2017
9,618
I feel like the CCP was (much like Trump is now) rushing to try and pretend that things were getting back to normal again, but then they suddenly realized what a horrible idea it was to try and brute force normalcy when this shit is far from over for anybody.
 

Ensorcell

Member
Oct 27, 2017
5,458
Anywhere else that decides to rush through this is going to have to do the same thing. People are so greedy the world is going to experience colossal whiplash.
 

Koo

Member
Dec 10, 2017
1,863
Even when things start opening up again aren't people going to be a bit hesitant to go out to these crowded places?
 

Calabi

Member
Oct 26, 2017
3,490
Even when things start opening up again aren't people going to be a bit hesitant to go out to these crowded places?

No they won't, it could be like opening the flood gates, everyone thinks its fine and interacts like they've been starved for over a month and then the second wave of the corona virus spread could be even bigger than the first.
 

Shoot

Member
Oct 25, 2017
4,549
This article from four days ago seems relevant.
Hong Kong appeared to have the coronavirus under control, then it let its guard down
Hong Kong (CNN) Only a week ago, Hong Kong seemed like a model for how to contain the novel coronavirus, with a relatively small number of cases despite months of being on the front lines of the outbreak.

That was in large part thanks to action taken early on, while cases were spreading across mainland China, to implement measures that are now familiar throughout the world: virus mapping, social distancing, intensive hand-washing, and wearing masks and other protective clothing.

Hong Kong was proof that these measures worked, with the city of 7.5 million only reporting some 150 cases at the start of March, even as the number of infections spiked in other East Asian territories like South Korea and Japan, and spread rapidly across Europe and North America.

Now, however, Hong Kong is providing a very different object lesson -- what happens when you let your guard down too soon. The number of confirmed cases has almost doubled in the past week, with many imported from overseas, as Hong Kong residents who had left -- either to work or study abroad, or to seek safety when the city seemed destined for a major outbreak earlier this year -- return, bringing the virus back with them.

On Monday, Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced that all non-residents would be barred from the territory as of Wednesday, the latest addition to a raft of new measures.

This is a pattern playing out across parts of Asia -- mainland China, Singapore, Taiwan -- that were among the first to tackle the outbreak. All are now introducing new restrictions as a sudden wave of renewed cases begins to crest.
On March 2, after several weeks of working from home, the majority of Hong Kong's 180,000 civil servants returned to their offices. Private employers, which have largely been taking their lead from the government, followed suit, and the city's subway system, though never exactly empty, was suddenly flush with people again.
This seemed like a reasonable measure at the time. Even as cases were on the rise in Italy and elsewhere, there were then only 100 confirmed in Hong Kong, and in mainland China the number of new infections was beginning to stabilize.

It was natural therefore that people began to relax somewhat, not only going to work instead of staying home, but also having dinner together, going to the park, and attending weddings and other large social gatherings. While face masks were still common, some people could be spotted going uncovered, particularly for short trips, and there was a general sense of slowly getting back to normal.

In the week that followed the March 2 return to work, there were only five new cases in Hong Kong, most of which were imported. Numbers remained low until around March 16, when dozens of new cases were confirmed. It soon became clear that while the majority were coming from overseas, quarantine measures in place were not sufficient, and local transmission had resumed.

Since then, the city has been racing to get back on top of the outbreak, with draconian new controls put in place, including electronic tagging of all new arrivals, who must undergo a strict 14-day home quarantine, and could face criminal prosecution if they are found in breach of it. Over the weekend, police could be seen patrolling nightlife districts looking for those violating quarantine, arresting at least five people, two of whom had cut their wristbands off in order to go out.

As of Monday, civil servants are working from home again, and many private businesses are expected to follow suit. One of the government's top health advisers has warned that authorities may have to order a more comprehensive shutdown and provide financial assistance to those affected, if it is to contain the new wave of infections.
I expect the same thing to happen in more countries in the coming months as lockdowns get lifted and reinstated.
 

HockeyBird

Member
Oct 27, 2017
12,591
I don't believe China's narrative one bit. I have no doubt that they reduced the number of cases significantly but I wouldn't be surprised if reality is far worse than what they are projecting. Now that the rest of the world is focused on their own countries, it makes it easier for them to cover up the truth on their end.
 

Raxus

Member
Oct 26, 2017
7,510
I don't believe China's narrative one bit. I have no doubt that they reduced the number of cases significantly but I wouldn't be surprised if reality is far worse than what they are projecting. Now that the rest of the world is focused on their own countries, it makes it easier for them to cover up the truth on their end.
Wouldn't shock me. They likely killed off the whistle blower too. But I rather not turn this into a conspiracy thread.
 

Prine

Attempted to circumvent ban with alt account
Banned
Oct 25, 2017
15,724
Not surprising, CCP doing what they can to paint a rosey picture for themselves to distract from the ongoing crisis still unfolding. Not going to report numbers either to keep up their facade.
 

thefit

Member
Oct 25, 2017
6,243
The world is in denial. There is no going back to normal until a vaccine is found. No stimulus no nothing is going to cure the economy. The world you knew 2 weeks ago is gone.